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Showing posts from November, 2020

Review - Dogs in the North: Stories of Cooperation and Co-Domestication

Before I go further: this is an academic book. Each chapter is a standalone article on some aspect of the relationship between dogs and humans in the circumpolar north, arranged in a roughly geographical loop from Siberia to North America and Greenland and then back to the Sami and their dogs. The idea of this arrangement is that modern Arctic dogs may be the result of a relationship that started somewhere in Siberia. The strange result is that this causes the book to open and close on reindeer dogs, with a segue through sled dogs and hunting dogs in between. I don't expect that this book will be of uniform interest to everyone, even to everyone who likes dogs and enjoys learning about them. I do think that some of the articles discuss aspects of the use and history of Arctic dogs that are absolutely vital to understanding them, their place in the cultures in which they arose, and how dogs and humans work together in those contexts. I suspect most readers who will get much out of

Review - Morozov: The Story of a Family and a Lost Collection

I received a digital copy of this book for free via NetGalley for an honest review. This is a generally quite interesting account of one of the more famous Russian art collections and the family that founded it. The author is a Russian art historian, and while the translation is good, the text in many ways remains clearly intended for a Russian audience. I don't mind this, but some readers may find it occasionally odd in style or content. Although the book is at some level presented as a biography specifically of Ivan Abramovich Morozov, it's in many ways an overview of art collecting in late 19th/early 20th century Russia (mainly Moscow) with an emphasis on the Morozov family as a whole. As an accompaniment to an exhibition, it would undoubtedly be fascinating. Unfortunately, without most of the paintings being featured in the book's illustrations, I don't recognize many of them by title alone. A significant portion of the book is a fairly detailed accoun

Review - The Sediments of Time: My Lifelong Search for the Past

I received an electronic copy of this book for free via NetGalley for an honest review. This is a well-written and informative book, and while it is an autobiographical account of Meave Leakey's life, it's also very much a discussion of what the field of paleoanthropology has learned from many of the projects she's been involved in over her long career. It does make for interesting reading, though as someone whose knowledge of the field is pretty limited to a single undergraduate course I took as a gen ed about eight years ago, I had to Google things pretty frequently while reading. Meave Leakey has led an interesting life, and it's certainly enjoyable to read a little bit about it. The first chapters address some of the challenges she faced as a woman in science in the 1960s--she was trained as a marine biologist, but ended up working in Africa because she was repeatedly denied a place on research vessels on the justification that they did not have facili

Review - From Dill to Dracula: A Romanian Food & Folklore Cookbook

  I received an electronic copy of this book via NetGalley for an honest review. This is a really nice cookbook that offers a good variety of recipes, with clear instructions and primarily ingredients readily accessible to an American kitchen (which is the target audience). The author even provides a recipe for making your own Vegeta, because she describes it as difficult to find in grocery stores (which is not my experience, but then, I regularly shop at Polish ethnic markets). The photography is beautiful (both of food and of Romanian scenery), and I found many recipes that I hope to return and try out. Not being specifically familiar with Romanian cooking, I can't speak to the authenticity of the recipes. Some of them are very typical of an East-Central European context, others less generalized to the whole region--but as I said, they are well-adapted to the availability of ingredients in North America. I did not find the folklore segment of the book nearly as stro

Review - Shikake: The Japanese Art of Shaping Behavior Through Design

  I received an electronic ARC of this book through NetGalley for an honest review. I'm never quite sure what to make of the "The [Cultural] [Art, Magic, Theory, etc.] of [Thing]" trend in book titles. I've admittedly not read that many, but they often seem to deal with something that is not so much a unique aspect of the titular culture as merely a method of doing things that is being labeled either by the author's country of origin or, in the case of those written by authors from the same country as the target audience, where the author first "discovered" the method. I get the impression that for this book, it's mostly a "Japanese art" because Naohiro Matsumura is from Japan and uses a Japanese term to describe the book's subject--not because design meant to gently modify behavior and encourage people to engage with aspects of their environment is specifically Japanese (though maybe it is more prevalent in Japan--I don